Former Tajik Inmate Recounts Guantanamo Ordeal

Eurasia Digest / Tajikistan Daily DigestJanuary 10, 2005

Tajikistan's "Crime-Info" published an interview on 6 January with a
man identified only as Abdurahmon, who recounted his experiences during
two years of imprisonment at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba. Abdurahmon, a Tajik citizen, said that he ended up in Guantanamo
after Afghan police turned him over to U.S. forces in Afghanistan for a
reward; he claimed to have no ties to either the Taliban or Al-Qaeda.
Abdurahmon said he was first held in Afghanistan in Bagram and
Kandahar, where soldiers abused detainees, humiliating them and forcing
them to commit acts contrary to Islam. Prisoners were not beaten,
however, he said. Abdurahmon said that the detention facility at
Guantanamo was, "in comparison with our prisons...of course, better.
It's clean everywhere. They fed us OK. Detainees had access to various
literature, including the Koran." But he said he signed various
confessions after being subjected to psychological coercion. He also
noted that medical treatment was inconsistent, perhaps intentionally, and many detainees suffered from illness. Abdurahmon, who was
part of a group of 11 Tajik citizens eventually released from
Guantanamo, said that he now suffers from hepatitis C. DK